Part 2 of CCLP’s 2026 legislative wrap-up, including defending public programs, strengthening consumer rights, and looking to the future.
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2026 Legislative wrap-up, part 1
Part 1 of CCLP's 2026 legislative wrap-up, including advocacy work, policy priorities, and advancing economic justice.
CCLP testifies in support of Colorado families
Charles Brennan provided testimony in support of House Bill 26-1221, which would have scaled back two corporate tax breaks to go to a new tax credit to help families with kids. This bill was one of four bills a part of Colorado Fiscal Institute’s fiscal policy package, and one of CCLP’s priorities. Unfortunately, the bill was postponed indefinitely.
CCLP testifies against bill that could harm low-wage workers
Katherine Wallat, Legal Director at CCLP, provided testimony against House Bill 26-1327, which aimed to address the problem of large corporations relying on the state to provide health insurance by paying their workers low enough wages to enroll in Medicaid. CCLP agrees corporations should pay their fair share, but ultimately opposed the bill because of the harm it could cause workers perceived to use Medicaid due to their age, disability, or income level.
CCLP letter urging Governor Polis to sign HB25-1147

On Wednesday, April 16, 2025, Annie Martínez, Esq., CCLP’s Litigation Director, sent Colorado Governor Jared Polis a letter urging him to sign HB25-1147, Fairness & Transparency in Municipal Court, after he threatened a veto. CCLP is in support of HB25-1147.
Dear Governor Polis,
On behalf of the Colorado Center on Law and Policy (CCLP), an anti-poverty organization advancing the rights of every Coloradan, I urge you to sign House Bill 25-1147 into law. This bill is a necessary step toward ending the criminalization of poverty in Colorado and ensuring that our municipal court systems reflect the values of fairness, equal protection, and dignity that our state holds dear. The lives of many Coloradans depend on this bill.
Municipal courts were never intended to bypass the Constitution. Yet, across Colorado, basic due process and proportionality are denied to those least able to defend themselves.
As a former municipal court-appointed defender, I have sat beside clients—unhoused, struggling, and often voiceless—facing months in jail for the same low-level offenses that would carry mere days in state court. This discrepancy is not only unjust, it is unconstitutional and unsustainable. Municipal courts should not be permitted to impose harsher jail sentences than state courts for identical conduct, nor should they use local jails as de facto shelters at the expense of county taxpayers.
HB25-1147 brings long-overdue accountability and consistency to our fragmented municipal court system by:
- Prohibiting excessive municipal sentencing that exceeds state court maximums, which ensures people are not punished more harshly simply because of the courtroom they happen to be in.
- Guaranteeing the right to counsel for anyone facing jail time, which reinforces Colorado’s commitment to equal access to justice.
- Requiring open courtrooms for in-custody hearings to bring transparency to systems that often operate in the shadows.
- Clarifying that home rule authority does not permit municipalities to violate constitutional rights or impose financial burdens on counties through excessive incarceration.
Counties and sheriffs support this legislation for good reason; incarcerating people experiencing homelessness is the most expensive and least effective response to poverty. Public safety is not served by warehousing our marginalized neighbors. Instead, it is strengthened when we respond with stable housing, services, and rational, consistent sentencing practices.
HB25-1147 is a true reflection of Colorado values. It is supported by health and mental health advocates, disability rights organizations, immigrant justice advocates, local governments, and criminal justice reformers. It’s time for our laws to match the progress our communities are working toward daily, and this bill does just that.
As an advocate for the rights of every Coloradan and someone who has defended individuals caught in the punishing gears of local courts, I urge you to sign HB25-1147 into law. Let this be the year Colorado chooses justice over punishment, consistency over chaos, and dignity over degradation.
Have Colorado be the state that reaffirms this fundamental truth: constitutional rights don’t stop at the doors of municipal court. Sign HB25-1147 and bring our legal system back in line with our values.
Sincerely,
Annie Martínez
Litigation Director
Colorado Center on Law and Policy
